President Koroma of Sierra Leone to continue as Party Chairman and Leader

Presidential and general elections will be held in Sierra Leone in February 2018. And the battle for presidential candidacy in both the ruling APC and the country’s main opposition SLPP party is predicted to be the fiercest yet fought, since the country gained independence in 1961.

Already, old wounds, opened up by skirmishes involving candidates for the presidential flagbearership of the SLPP and their supporters remain unhealed, as party chiefs are accused of failing to exercise authority and control over bad behaviour and constitutional misconduct.

While the opposition SLPP continues to tear itself apart and appearing less attractive to voters as a government in waiting, the ruling APC administrative machinery is maintaining strong control and discipline among its aspiring presidential candidates.

This contrasting state of affairs between the two main political parties, is much a product of their respective organizational culture, as it is the strength of leadership and collective sense of how to win power and keep it.

SLPP’s liberal democratic values are in sharp contrast to the ruling APC’s Chinese Communist Party style tendencies, where authoritarianism and centralised control is paramount.

But accusations of tribalism within the SLPP are not only inconsistent with their professed liberal democratic values, they are threatening the very fabric that binds the party together.

Since its formation over sixty years ago, SLPP has had an undeservedly poor record of internal party squabbles and change of leadership, in comparison with the ruling APC, which continues to seriously affect their chances of successfully competing against the APC at the polls. Winning elections is even much harder for the SLPP, with the APC in office.

President Koroma’s constitutional term of office comes to an end in 2018. But according to ruling APC party rules there is nothing stopping him from being elected once again as leader and chairman of APC, by his party members at the next party convention taking place early next year.

After all, while his record as president of Sierra Leone is anything but satisfactory, the party has much to be grateful for, after Koroma’s success in elevating the party from near extinction, to a new, vibrant and confident mass movement, with a strong grass-roots foundation.

Furthermore, what is evidently clear is that Koroma’s authoritarian hold on the party leadership has perhaps become the single most significant factor that accounts for the perceived unity, order and stability within the ruling party.

Will the fight for a new APC leader, chairman and presidential candidate, soon cast president Koroma into the distant memory of history?

John Baimba Sesay – Sierra Leone’s information attaché at the Embassy in Beijing, China, speaks to the Secretary General of the ruling APC party – Mr Osman Yansaneh (Photo).

This is John Baimba’s account of the interview:

The return to office in 2007, of the APC under the leadership of His Excellency the President Dr. Ernest Bai Koroma, saw a swift reappearance of the exceptional relationship between the two nations – China and Sierra Leone. And given these ties, both parties have continued to have high level exchange visits in the last few years.

Prior to the departure of the APC party Secretary General – Osman Yansaneh and delegation from China for Sierra Leone on the 23rd of September, I caught up with him to talk about a range of issues, not least, the party’s march towards electing its presidential flag-bearer; factors it shall be looking at in securing an acceptable candidate, and above all, the immaculate role the current chairman and leader of the party – Dr. Ernest Bai Koroma has played in building the party over the years.

First, I asked how different his recent visit to China has been, compared to his 2013 visit:

OFY: In 2013, we didn’t zero in on party to party politics. It was government, economic relationship, cultural and social linkages. But now, we moved towards party-to-party relationship. China has enabled the APC to leave legacies in terms of infrastructure, people-to-people contact. But then, the party constitutes the deciding factors in terms of the policies towards other political parties and governments.

The APC has consistently established a working relationship with the Chinese Communist Party. In fact the Sierra Leone China Friendship society and the China House were initiatives of the APC. The China House is now controlled by a former SLPP minister who is ideologically unsympathetic to the CPC and is only interested in renting the building for personal gains.

On another note, during our visit to Sichuan province, we requested for a partnership between that province and another province in Sierra Leone. The deputy secretary general of the CPC in the province agreed in principle. Our Ambassador here in China is expected to make a follow up on the issue. The cooperation will encompass agriculture, road construction and education for a start. Generally, we have decided that the time has come for some physical, positive manifestation of this relationship between the two parties.

John: What are these physical manifestations?

OFY: We are planning to construct a seven storey APC/CPC building. The Chinese had initiated action. When the Vice Chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference visited Sierra Leone earlier this year, he made a donation. We said we were to keep that as seed money as their own contribution towards the start of that project.

In principle they agreed, but then we told them during this our visit we would particularly make a specific request and that request was positively responded to by the Minister and Deputy Minister we saw. The focal person on the part of the CPC would be the Vice Minister in charge of the International Department of the CPC and then I suggested the Ambassador here as our own Focal Person. Essentially we have given them what the cost of the entire project would be.

John: In 2013, you spoke of the challenges the party’s branches in the Diaspora were having. Recently, you were abroad, conducting meetings and conventions. How has this helped in positioning these branches given their respective contributions to the growth of the party?

OFY: The Diasporans are positively responding by increasing their membership.

Our main source of income is from registration and contributions made by members. The Diaspora has responded positively in that direction and we are happy. This time round, we went round and got only those who are paid up members. During the last visits, we had to establish interim executives but this time round, substantive executives were put in place by members of the party. They all realized that this is a period the APC needed unity. And through consultation and a process of selection we were able to put in place substantive executives.

John: The National Youth League were to conduct their annual conference in October but had to be postponed to November. What reasons are responsible for this?

OFY: It was not deliberate. The decision was to hold the elections in Port Loko where we have the Bai Bureh Hall which should serve as the venue for the conference. But it turned out that the contractor for the refurbishment of the hall would not be able to complete before the 21st of October, 2016, which was the scheduled date for the youth conference. It has now been shifted a month later.

John: There appears to be some level of tensions between and among supporters of those aspiring for the presidency of the League. Isn’t that worrying?

OFY: The APC believes in democracy, people have a right to their opinion and these opinions would move into some concrete arrangements where we would sit together through consultations and where it is necessary to hold an election, we would hold an election. Where selection is necessary we would do it that way.

John: When is the party going for its National Delegates Conference?

OFY: We had a resolution in 2013 specifically stating that our National Delegates Conference will take place within 12 months to elections. February, 2017 will be what that time-frame is.

John: And will the party be having a flag-bearer that period?

OFY: Definitely that is the time we will decide who our flag-bearer would be!

John: You said recently, that only a “blue-blooded APC” would lead the party to elections. What does that mean?

OFY: It would be suicidal to give the leadership of our party to a new member; somebody who just comes to school today, tomorrow he wants to be a Senior Prefect of the school. No, he has to go through some learning process. That is why we are saying only a blue-blooded APC could lead the party to elections.

John: Who then is a blue-blooded APC?

OFY: Somebody who has gone through the rigors of the party, held responsible positions within the party structure, and has served the party diligently. These are the factors we look for.

We also mean somebody who is loyal to the party and has deep institutional knowledge of the party and its people. We cannot afford to choose a weak and untested individual. The person has to be battle tested. We in the APC know people who were on the margins when we most needed their support in the trying days of the struggle to savage our party from the morass in which it had sunk after the NPRC coup.

We know that an APC candidate would be the next president of Sierra Leone. We chose the best for Sierra Leone in President Koroma and we cannot afford to fall short of another Ernest Bai Koroma or close to him.

John: People implicitly or explicitly continue to make known their desire to lead the party to elections. What is the party’s position on this?

OFY: We are not aware of those who have come out because the party has a programme and if you are a member of the party, you should operate within that programme. We said we are going to hold a National Delegates Conference. We said we are going to ask people to apply.

When you want position in the APC, within a few months we would make an announcement and say applications are invited. But if you start expressing your opinion, APC is a democratic party, we would not stop you.

John: A likable and popular character has been the current Party Chairman and Leader. In a 2013 interview I had with you, you said there was no desire on the part of the party to remove him as Chairman and Leader even when he shall have retired. Is this still the same today?

OFY: That is still the case because of his popularity and the diligent manner in which he has worked for the party. The rank and file of the party would have loved him to continue to serve as President of the Republic of Sierra Leone but he himself has maintained that at the end of his two terms he would retire. But the party has no term limit, so the views are that the President could still serve as Chairman and Leader and we would get the presidential flag-bearer whose position would be different from that of the Chairman and Leader.

John: Why was the recommendation to the CRC by the party that a serving president should retire after two terms but that after an intervening one five year term he should be allowed to contest if he so desires?

OFY: We believe a former president who has completed his two mandatory terms of five years each should be given a chance to contest again after an intervening five year. Our president did not make this suggestion. It came from supporters and some of us are of the view that such a move protects the right of an individual to serve his country.

John: There was this smooth transition in having the current Vice President as per law. How did the party ensure that smooth process?

OFY: The APC is a disciplined party. It has a way of addressing issues in a non-personate manner. We have our rules clearly defined and we play by the rule of law.

Our constitution is part of the laws of Sierra Leone. The constitution that we have mandates us to appoint a presidential candidate who in turn has the mandate to appoint his running mate. They run on the same ticket but the practical reality is that it is the presidential candidate that is voted for. We are able to do it because the APC is a disciplined party. We did not do anything outside the framework of the law.

Nobody had tested our national constitution. People give it the literal translation. And in law we have the literal translation and the purposive translation. The Supreme Court was ceased of this difficulty and they came out and did a purposive analysis and interpreted the constitution impeccably.

So as I said, the APC is a disciplined party and respects the rule of law. We exhausted the remedies provided in our constitution and did not act on emotions. The decision of the Supreme Court was final and we stand by it.

John: The role of an opposition to the sustenance of democracy is crucial. What could you say about the current opposition platform in the country?

OFY: The SLPP has the tendency to cry foul for everything. Even when they were in charge of governance in 2007, they complained that we were rigging the elections. In opposition we were very positive; we supported the government of the SLPP. They would have these fantastic ideas; they throw them in the air and it ends there because they are not genuine.

SLPP is very uncaring; it is the origin of the party, made up of people with elitist thinking and behavior. As far as they are concerned, the ordinary people don’t matter. They have no concerns for the ordinary people, but we do have and that is the difference.

Most prominent people would want to come to the APC because they are materialists also. We refused to accept them, because in the first place, in a successful democracy, getting an effective opposition is a sine qua non (absolutely needed) for promoting the democratic governance.

Some prominent SLPP members have made requests to cross over to the APC. We rejected them to enhance the opposition. This is because if they come it would degenerate to a situation like the 70s when most SLPP people left their party, came to us and we had a one party system.

John: Close to the end of the second term. What legacies could be pointed at?

OFY: The party under President Koroma has established a change of attitude on the part of the people. A lot of changes have taken place in terms of physical infrastructure; the road networks not only in the city but also in the twelve districts headquarter towns. We have also ensured the provision of additional megawatts from 6 to over 100, added to the fight against corruption, which has been intensified under this regime.

4 Comments

The strange and incomprehensible rationale of APC politics baffles every sound thinking person. They now intend to affiliate the APC Party to the Chinese Communist Party and with it may want to turn Sierra Leone into a Communist system, if still in government.

Actually, I do not harbour disdain for the Chinese; on the contrary I have always held high esteem for these people. They have demonstrated to the world an enviable capability of transformation from a third world country to an advanced and prosperous nation, only to peer with the USA on global economy today. And have ushered in livelihood and good standard of living to the Chinese people.

However, the APC government in their quest for alliance with the Chinese had proved incapable of emulating the steps made to progress by their Chinese counterparts in nation building, economic and social transformation in Sierra Leone, almost a decade of governance in partnership with the Chinese. Instead, Sierra Leone continues sliding down the path towards a failed state as the outlook appears presently.

Sierra Leoneans would actually like the government to account for the Chinese presence in the country and how their presence had impacted the lives of the ordinary citizens. As for what we are seeing now the social landscape is deplorable, which indicates that this partnership is far from being a mutual benefit to the Sierra Leone people.

Most people feel that the Chinese are in Sierra Leone to nurture vicious and corrupt political elites who had failed to deliver in their responsibilities to provide needed services to the people. What might have also attracted our government about the Chinese is the Chinese lax demand for accountability for funds released to this government.

If the Chinese interest in Sierra Leone is about building long term relationship and economic partnership with the Sierra Leone people, it is pertinent on their part that they make little effort to exert some amount of control over funds released for projects meant to improve the lives of the people in the country, monitor their implementation, demand result oriented performance and to meet deadlines. In this way, they will definitely win the hearts of the Sierra Leone people. And this is a guarantee for long term mutual friendship.

The APC elites are yet stuck in the past – this is the cause for their lack of progress in governance. The party is a system of dynasty and a secret society where power is dominated by the privileged ones and not on merit.

There is no room for democratic debate within the party; structural and modern transformation is far-fetched. The elites within the party stand as the only rightful leaders, whether they’re capable or not.

‘All power in heaven and earth oh-oh belongs to God. Mammy water power nar powerless power, murray man (CPC Party of Cina) power nar powerless power, but Jesus power nar SUPER-SUPER POWER’. This is one of the songs we used to sing in the various Pentecostal churches in Sierra Leone.

The Ernest Bai Koroma led APC (Always Problems Continues) party led government has seen the hand writing on the wall, predicting their downfall and utter disgrace come the next presidential and general elections in 2018; and they are clinging for life support on the Chinese Communist party of mainland China to form an alliance of support to cushion the effects of their defeat come 2018.

Look your APC strategies, mainland China has not gained world status as the 2nd largest economy through corruption, neglect and abuse of power as you have done and are doing now. But they as a party heavily invested in their human resources in China, from grassroots up, by establishing free educations up to tertiary level; from kindergarten for all it citizens; mass food production and export; free public housing and good economic management and leadership, which is lacking in the APC party with a combined total of nearly 34 years of leadership as the ruling and governing party out of the 55 years of Sierra Leone independence from colonial rule.

I am kindly appealing to the CPC Party of mainland China not to allow the corrupt APC party of Sierra Leone to stain and and mess with the hard work, character building and image building of the Communist People Party of mainland China by any alliance with them for any strategic reasons.

You have a right to your opinion. It is always good to look at both sides of the argument.

You have presented the good side of the APC ignoring the ugly situation prevailing such as sectionalism, tribalism, focusing on developing some districts that support APC and leaving those that do not – such as Kenema.

I am sure with Maada in the lead during the lower level elections, unity and victory is bound to filter in the cadre of SLPP.

In politics, it is good to elect someone who the masses love and not the minority senior politicians.

The time has come when ALL SIERRA LEONEANS wherever they may be, shall see the POWER of the ALMIGHTY GOD unfolding before their eyes.

The suffering of the Sierra Leonean people will soon come to an END so also false power of the supervisors of evil. To put it simply, GOD will CHOOSE the next leadership team of Sierra Leone by HIS GRACE.

The INDEPENDENCE OR SALVATION OF THE SIERRA LEONEAN has come. GLORY BE TO GOD. AMEN